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3. MDGs and children

3. MDGs and children. “Children in Developing Countries” Lecture course by Dr. Renata Serra. Millenium Development Goals adopted at the Millenium Summit (Sept. 2000). Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger

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3. MDGs and children

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  1. 3. MDGs and children “Children in Developing Countries” Lecture course by Dr. Renata Serra

  2. Millenium Development Goalsadopted at the Millenium Summit (Sept. 2000) • Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger • T1 & T2: Halve between 1990 and 2015 the proportion of people whose income is less than $1 a day and who suffer from hunger • Achieve universal primary education • T3: ensure that by 2015 children everywhere, boys and girls alike, will be able to complete a full course of primary schooling • Promote gender equality and empower women • T4: eliminate gender disparity in primary and secondary education by 2005, and in all levels of ed. not later than 2015 • Reduce child mortality • T5: reduce by 2/3 between 1990 and 2015 the IMR5 • Improve maternal health • T6: reduce by ¾ the maternal mortality ratio • Combat HIV/AIDS, and other diseases • Ensure environmental sustainability • T10: reverse by 2015 the proportion of people without sustainable access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation • Develop global partnership for development

  3. The MDGs & CRC • MDGs are bold and ambitious goals (as in CRC) • Most MDGs are about children • MDGs require not just increase in service provision but also a wider approach to children that incorporate their full rights • Common principles of universality and non-discrimination

  4. MDGs are not enough • Focus on MDGs will not be sufficient to help all children: many are bound to be left out! • National averages mask unacceptable living conditions for a minority • Policy focus on populous countries (India and China) detract away from the plight of children elsewhere • Many children will continue to remain ‘invisible’ to governments, agencies and Millennium programs •  Need to go deeper and pay attention to the rights of the most vulnerable children

  5. Excluded and invisible children • Exclusion from: • Essential services • An environment that protects children from violence, abuse and exploitation • Full social and political participation • Excluded by: • Family, community, society, governments, etc. • Exclusion (social, economic and political) is dangerous because it breeds further exclusion • At some point children become invisible • They disappear from statistics, policies and programs

  6. The causes of exclusion • National level: • Limited government resources (country’s poverty) • Children not regarded as priority under tight budgets • Inadequate government policies • Weak political and administrative capacity • Inability to carry out intended measures • HIV/AIDS and other major diseases • Wars and conflicts

  7. Causes of exclusion (cont’d) • Sub-national level: • Within each country, children of particular groups are excluded • Discrimination occurs according to income, rural-urban divide, gender, ethnicity, religion • Income inequality is very high in LA&C (Brazil) and in South Africa • Differential in under-5 mortality rates may be stunning (Peru) • Exclusion may start with non-registration at birth for some minority or indigenous groups and lack of coverage in national statistics • Disabled children face huge discrimination everywhere • In poor countries, much of disability is also preventable

  8. Critical inter-linkages • Early childhood events have lasting effects on subsequent individual development • At individual level, deprivation in one area interacts with many others: Malnutrition  physical development / disease  reduced life potential  ability to learn  productivity and earning • On a macro-scale, children’s exclusion from the benefits of development  reduced country socio-economic development and political instability

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